Development of Tanner Stage-Age Adjusted CDC Height Curves for Research and Clinical Applications

J Endocr Soc. 2020 Jul 17;4(9):bvaa098. doi: 10.1210/jendso/bvaa098. eCollection 2020 Sep 1.

Abstract

Background and objective: Variations in normal pubertal development, pubertal disorders, and race/ethnicity can lead to differences in growth patterns and timing that are not captured by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) height-for-chronological age (CAHeight) charts. Therefore, we sought to develop new Tanner stage-adjusted height-for-age (TSAHeight) charts accounting for these differences.

Study design: Population-based Tanner staging and anthropometric data for 13 358 children age 8 to 18 years from 3 large US national surveys: National Health Examination Surveys (NHES cycle III); the Hispanic Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (HHANES) and the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES III) were analyzed. TSAHeight semi-parametric models with additive age splines were used to develop smoothed TSAHeight curves accounting for maturation stage and calendar age.

Results: As expected, the TSAHeight curves did not track along the respective percentile curves for the CDC 2000 CAHeight curves. We generated race/ethnicity-nonspecific and race/ethnicity-specific TSAHeight charts stratified by sex and plotted against the CDC 2000 CAHeight curves to account for the pubertal status differences between these models. An online calculator to adjust height for pubertal status was created.

Conclusions: TSAHeight charts provide a much-needed tool to assess and manage linear growth for US children over the course of puberty. These tools may be useful in clinical management of children with pubertal timing variations.

Keywords: Height; epidemiologic methods; ethnicity; growth charts; national surveys; puberty.